From: Jake Jake (spage@nc.rr.com)
Date: Tue Dec 10 2002 - 00:38:59 GMT-3
L0 L1 and L2 are in area 0 as she stated "R3 (interfaces L0, L1, & L2 are
area 0), e0/0 is area 3" below. I believe you will need to create a tunnel
to get this to work since nssa area doesnt allow virtual link.
Thoughts?
Jake.
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Peter van Oene
Sent: Monday, December 09, 2002 10:09 PM
To: Debbie Westall
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Ospf stub and NSSA problem
> > >* There is frame-relay, fully meshed between R1, R2 & R3., R5 is
connected
> > > via ethernet.
> > >* R1 (all interfaces), area 1
> > >* R2 (loopback2, s0/0.1and s0/0.2) - area 1
> > >* R3 (s0/0.1 & s0/0.2) are in OSPF area 1
> > >* Area 1 is an NSSA.
> > >* R3 (interfaces L0, L1, & L2 are area 0), e0/0 is area 3.
> > >* R5 (Interfaces e0/0, L0) area Area 2.
> > >* Area 2 is a stub network.
> >
> > Where is the backbone? (area 0.0.0.0)
>
>The backbone is located on R3, loopback interfaces l0, l1 and l2.
Are those interfaces in area 0? Your notes say 1.
>Debbie
>
> >
> > >I don't see routes in R3 to R5, except for the directly connected. And
> > >vice versa from R5 to R3. In addition, on R5 I have formed a neighbor
> > >relationship, but have no routing table, except for the directly
> > >connected.
> > >
> > >I tried setting up a virtual link through Area 1, but it will not
because
> > >Area 1 is an NSSA.
> > >
> > >I don't know what I'm missing.
> > >
> > >Thanks for any assistance
> > >
> > >Debbie
> > >.
> > .
.
.
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